● Why amongst the back-shu
points is listed Dushu (BL-16), referring to Governor Vessel, even though TCM
does not connect it to a specific organ? Is there a plausible explanation
for why it finds just between Xinshu (Heart point) and Geshu (Diaphragm
point) and not elsewhere? If it is an organ, which could it be? Is there in
the body a "Governor organ"? According to comparative approach the answer is
yes, there is!Answered, not yet published, it will be in the book
mentioned above

● Why the stomach and gall bladder meridians
that are of yang nature run down the anterior aspect of chest-abdomen like
intruders into a yin meridian territory? Why differently the back is covered
by yang meridians only?Answered, not yet published, it will be in the book
mentioned above

The following four questions/answers are
specially connected each other:
● Why at least one fourth of the dorsal, lateral
and yang aspect of the foot is occupied by the liver meridian that
is a yin meridian?● Why most of acupuncture meridians start or end
to a jing point at a finger/toe nail-corner, and that of the
pericardium ends to the tip of the middle finger?● Why all fingers and toes are provided with a
meridian except the third toe? (Question asked by
Charles Shang, MD and researcher)● Why the sole of the foot is exclusively
controlled by the kidney yin meridian?Answered, not yet published, they will be in the book
mentioned above

●
Why in arms and hands the acupuncture meridians are arranged in such
ordered, always parallel paths, with the three yin and three yang that cover
the ventral and dorsal aspect, never touching each other? On the contrary,
Why on the medial side of legs and foots the kidney meridian (as seen above)
draws a loop and little more above the three yin meridian run so close each
other and nearly touch at the spleen point SP-6?
Answered, not yet published, it will be in the book mentioned above

● Why Traditional Chinese
Medicine privileged pericardium rather than pleura or peritoneum and
assigned the rank of main organ and meridian to it? What is the veritable
organ/function - imho unknown to modern medicine - that the ancient Chinese
wanted to point out by giving it the name "pericardium"?Answered, not yet published, it will be in the book
mentioned above

● Why head surface is covered by yang meridians
exclusively, and head organs (brain, tongue, eyes, ears etc.) by yin
meridians?Answered, not yet published

Before
leaving this page take a look at the
table of contents of this
revolutionary approach.

Ask Dr. Marcelli stefanomarcelli@tiscali.it a question
about particular features of the Acupuncture Meridian System that are not
listed here, so that he can try to give an answer according to the
comparative approach, and by the means of scientific method. Or - much better - you are
invited to communicate your own answered questions, which will be published
and credited in this site and in possible scientific papers. Science means
sharing and progress of knowledge. Before I applied the scientific method to
acupuncture research, there were no new acquisitions in the knowledge about
the Acupuncture Meridian System since thousands years, so it was officially
dead and generated comprehensible rejection by rational minds, differently
from TCM herbology, which has already incorporated plenty of new
acquisitions from modern chemistry, biochemistry, pharmacology and
toxicology.